Black Diamond Therapeutics, Inc. announced the first patients dosed in mutation matched expansion cohorts of non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) in the ongoing Phase 1 clinical study evaluating BDTX-1535. BDTX-1535, a fourth-generation, brain-penetrant epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) MasterKey tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI), is under investigation for the treatment of NSCLC harboring intrinsic driver and/or acquired resistance (post-osimertinib) EGFR mutations and glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) with multiple EGFR alterations. The BDTX-1535 expansion cohort portion of the study will assess single-agent objective response rate (ORR) in a second- or third-line setting in NSCLC patients with EGFR intrinsic driver and/or acquired resistance mutations, who have received prior treatment with approved EGFR TKI.

The dosing of the first patients in the expansion cohorts follows the Company?s initial data readout from the dose escalation portion of the BDTX-1535 Phase 1 clinical study, which demonstrated clinical proof of activity through radiographic responses in NSCLC patients harboring diverse types of EGFR mutations including intrinsic driver and post-osimertinib acquired resistance EGFR mutations. The discovery and development of BDTX-1535 was informed by the Company?s powerful Mutation-Allostery-Pharmacology (MAP) drug discovery engine, which leverages critical genomic profiling to expand the addressable patient population by targeting families of mutations with a single drug. Emergence of intrinsic driver and acquired resistance EGFR mutations to osimertinib represents a significant unmet need for patients with EGFR-mutant lung cancer.

Thirteen percent of patients in the U.S. with EGFR mutation-positive NSCLC show presence of intrinsic driver mutations, which are associated with worse clinical outcomes when treated with currently approved EGFR TKIs. Fifteen percent of patients in the U.S. whose disease has progressed after osimertinib therapy show evidence of acquired resistance EGFR mutations (e.g., C797S) for which currently there is no approved EGFR TKI. The Company is advancing BDTX-1535 as a potential targeted therapy option for patients with this broad spectrum of EGFR mutations in second-line NSCLC, and plans to investigate safety and efficacy in a first-line setting in NSCLC patients with intrinsic driver EGFR mutations after discussion with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

The Phase 1 first-in-human, open-label clinical trial of BDTX-1535 (NCT05256290) consists of a dose escalation portion that evaluated the safety, pharmacokinetics (PK), and preliminary anti-tumor activity of BDTX-1535 followed by dose expansion cohorts. The trial is evaluating BDTX-1535 in patients with advanced/metastatic NSCLC harboring EGFR mutations with or without central nervous system (CNS) disease, or with recurrent GBM expressing EGFR alterations. The Phase 1 dose escalation portion of the study in NSCLC and GBM patients has been completed and the study is now progressing to evaluate BDTX-1535 as a single agent, second-line or third-line therapy in two cohorts of EGFR mutation-positive NSCLC patients with progressive disease after prior therapy with EGFR TKI (e.g., osimertinib) to assess ORR, CNS ORR, duration of response, and progression-free survival and further evaluate safety, tolerability and PK: Second- or third-line NSCLC patients with acquired EGFR resistance mutations +/- CNS metastasis; and Second- or third-line NSCLC patients with EGFR intrinsic driver mutations +/- CNS metastasis.